Paula Rego was born in Lisbon, Portugal in 1935, an only child in a privileged family. At the time the country was ruled by the fascist dictator Antonio Salazar. His regime was hostile to women, a Latin version of kinder, kuche, kurche, So, although Paula's mother began to draw at the age of four there was no chance that she could make a career of art.
In 1951 Rego moved to England to study art at the Slade School under the care of a guardian; her family was quite conservative although strongly anti-fascist. Her father commissioned her to create murals for a workers' canteen in 1952 but it was a decade later before she began to exhibit her work in group shows in London.
The British Royal Academy has described Rego as "one of Europe's most influential contemporary figurative artists." In 2010 she was made a Dame by Queen Elizabeth for her contributions to the arts. Indeed the British were so fond of Rego that they routinely referred to her as a Portuguese-born British artist.
Rego died on June 8, 2022. Her granddaughter Grace Smart, a theatre designer, tweeted : "Paula Rego was a fantastic and world changing artist, and grandma. She taught us how to sew, draw, put on eyeliner, and tell uncomfortable stories." That last may be what the late critic Robert Hughes was referring to when he remarked that if there were two or more people in a Rego painting something bad would happen to one of them.
Image: Paula Rego - The Dance, acrylic on paper mounted on canvas, Tate Museum, London.
2 comments:
Je n'ai jamais vu d'oeuvre de cette artiste, mais cette scène de danse près de la mer semble évoquer en effet différentes situations de la vie, sous la pleine lune...
Tania, les peintures de Paula Rego dépeignent souvent un sentiment d'appréhension. Rego est décédé récemment à l'âge de quatre-vingt-sept ans.
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